The World's Greatest Books — Volume 09 — Lives and Letters eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 386 pages of information about The World's Greatest Books — Volume 09 — Lives and Letters.

The World's Greatest Books — Volume 09 — Lives and Letters eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 386 pages of information about The World's Greatest Books — Volume 09 — Lives and Letters.

Law was the next thing thought of, and his uncle Contarine, who had married his father’s sister, came forward with fifty pounds.  With this sum Oliver started for London, but gambled it all away in Dublin.  In bitter shame he wrote to his uncle, confessed, and was forgiven, and the good uncle then made up a small purse to carry him to Edinburgh for the study of medicine.

No traditions remain in Edinburgh as to the character or extent of Goldsmith’s studies there, but it may be supposed that his eighteen months’ residence was, on the whole, not unprofitable.  A curious document that has been discovered is a torn leaf of a tailor’s ledger radiant with “rich sky-blue satin, fine sky-blue shalloon, a superfine silver-laced small hat, rich black Genoa velvet, and superfine high claret-coloured cloth,” ordered by Mr. Oliver Goldsmith, student.

II.—­Through Europe with a Flute

From Edinburgh he sailed for Leyden, but called on the way at Newcastle and saw enough of England to be able to say that “of all objects on this earth an English farmer’s daughter is the most charming.”  Little is known of his pursuits at Leyden, where his principal means of support were as a teacher.  After staying there nearly a year, he quitted it (1755) at the age of twenty-seven, for a travel tour through Europe, with a guinea in his pocket, one shirt on his back, and a flute in his hand.

Goldsmith started on his travels in February, 1755, and stepped ashore at Dover February 1, 1756.  For his route it is necessary to consult his writings.  His letters of the time have perished.  In later life, Foote tells us, “he frequently used to talk, with great pleasantry, of his distresses on the Continent, such as living on the hospitalities of the friars, sleeping in barns, and picking up a kind of mendicant livelihood by the German flute.”  His early memoir-writers assert with confidence that in some small portion of his travels he acted as companion to a young man of large fortune.  It is certain that the rude, strange wandering life to which his nature for a time impelled him was an education picked up from personal experience and by actual collision with many varieties of men, and that it gave him on several social questions much the advantage over the more learned of his contemporaries.  As he passed through Flanders, Louvain attracted him, and here, according to his first biographer, he took the degree of medical bachelor.  This is likely enough.  Certain it is he made some stay at Louvain, became acquainted with its professors, and informed himself of its modes of study.  Some little time he also passed at Brussels.  Undoubtedly he visited Antwerp, and he rested a brief space in Paris.  He must have taken the lecture-rooms of Germany on his way to Switzerland.  Passing into that country he saw Schaffhausen frozen.  Geneva was his resting-place in Switzerland, but he visited Basle and Berne.  Descending into Piedmont, he saw Milan, Verona, Mantua, and Florence, and at Padua is supposed to have stayed some six months, and, it has been asserted, received his degree.  “Sir,” said Johnson to Boswell, “he disputed his passage through Europe.”

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The World's Greatest Books — Volume 09 — Lives and Letters from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.